
 
1944. World War II rages and the fate of the free world hangs in the balance.  Meanwhile the black pilots of the experimental Tuskegee training program are  courageously waging two wars at once � one against enemies overseas, and the  other against discrimination within the military and back home. Racial  prejudices have long held ace airman Martin "Easy" Julian (Nate Parker) and his  black pilots back at base - leaving them with little to do but further hone  their flying skills - while their white counterparts are shipped out to combat  after a mere three months of training. Mistakenly deemed inferior and assigned  only second-rate planes and missions, the pilots of Tuskegee have mastered the  skies with ease but have not been granted the opportunity to truly spread their  wings. Until now.  As the war in Europe continues to take its dire  toll on Allied forces, Pentagon brass has no recourse but to reconsider these  under-utilized pilots for combat duty. Just as the young Tuskegee men are on the  brink of being shut down and shipped back home, Col. A.J. Bullard (Terrence  Howard) awards them the ultimate chance to prove their mettle high above.  Undaunted by the prospect of providing safe escort to bombers in broad daylight - a mission so dangerous that the RAF has refused it and the white fighter  groups have sustained substantial losses - Easy's pilots at last join the fiery  aerial fray. Against all the odds, with something to prove and everything to  lose, these intrepid young airmen take to the skies in a heroic endeavor to  combat the enemy and the discrimination that has kept them down for so long.
Did you see how long winded that synopsis was?  The movie was equally long winded.  For something that was as simple as this movie basically is - there was no need for it to be 2 plus hours long.  They put so much time in to character development but there was not a single character that I cared about at all.  This was basically a chance for George Lucas to have actual planes in action scenes instead of the flying machines of the Star Wars universe.  And he's "been working on this for years".  Really?  Because the plane fight scenes seems to have the exact soundtrack as any space battle in Star Wars.  The bad guys sounded just like Tie fighters from the Empire.  I was basically waiting for the Red Tails leader to yell "Keep on target.  Stay on target".  
No - you should not see this.  Just like you pretty much shouldn't see any movie that is released in the month of January.  It was poop.  It was a very long poop.